"Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing else but medicine on a large scale"—Rudolf Virchow

December 31, 2018

New Year's Eve, 2008

Just out of curiosity, I've checked what I'd been blogging about here on December 31, 2008...ten short years ago.

It was mostly bird flu; the H1N1 "swine flu" pandemic was almost six months in the future, and I hadn't yet realized that bird flu could not be considered apart from an enormous range of global-health issue. (Also in the future: Haiti's cholera, MERS, H7N9, Zika, and urban Ebola.)

So I was reporting on a two-month-old baby in Shenzhen who was recovering from H9N2. The case provoked authorities in Guangdong to tighten inspection of poultry markets.

Indian doctors in Manipur were working "round the clock" to prevent the spread of H5N1 to their city after an outbreak in Assam state.

In Nigeria, the Bauchi state ministry of health was on the alert for H5N1 as well; it was about that time, I seem to recall, that Nigeria had one human case of H5N1, which had been fatal.

Here in Canada, Ontario was finally making public the rates of hospital-acquired infections from superbugs like C. diff and MRSA.

On New Year's Day, I was reporting a health scare about possible H5N1 in an Indonesian village. And I posted links to the old Flu Wiki Forum (no longer online) and Mike Coston at Avian Flu Diary (still very much online).

Ten years later we're watching a slightly different mix of bacteria and viruses, but the war goes on. It has been my good fortune to follow the war from a safe vantage point, while gaining ever deeper respect for the men and women fighting it from the villages of Asia and Africa and Latin America to the hospitals of Europe and North America. I hope my posts have accurately reported their extraordinary efforts.

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New Year's Eve, 2008

Just out of curiosity, I've checked what I'd been blogging about here on December 31, 2008...ten short years ago.

It was mostly bird flu; the H1N1 "swine flu" pandemic was almost six months in the future, and I hadn't yet realized that bird flu could not be considered apart from an enormous range of global-health issue. (Also in the future: Haiti's cholera, MERS, H7N9, Zika, and urban Ebola.)

So I was reporting on a two-month-old baby in Shenzhen who was recovering from H9N2. The case provoked authorities in Guangdong to tighten inspection of poultry markets.

Indian doctors in Manipur were working "round the clock" to prevent the spread of H5N1 to their city after an outbreak in Assam state.

In Nigeria, the Bauchi state ministry of health was on the alert for H5N1 as well; it was about that time, I seem to recall, that Nigeria had one human case of H5N1, which had been fatal.

Here in Canada, Ontario was finally making public the rates of hospital-acquired infections from superbugs like C. diff and MRSA.

On New Year's Day, I was reporting a health scare about possible H5N1 in an Indonesian village. And I posted links to the old Flu Wiki Forum (no longer online) and Mike Coston at Avian Flu Diary (still very much online).

Ten years later we're watching a slightly different mix of bacteria and viruses, but the war goes on. It has been my good fortune to follow the war from a safe vantage point, while gaining ever deeper respect for the men and women fighting it from the villages of Asia and Africa and Latin America to the hospitals of Europe and North America. I hope my posts have accurately reported their extraordinary efforts.